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Dualbooting Linux with Windows is the easiest thing in the world, you think, so you install your favorite Linux distro on top of a Windows system, and it sets itself up perfectly. A handy menu even asks which system you’d like to boot, and each system starts as if it were the only brain in the drum. But what if something goes wrong? What if you lose a partition? What if your Windows system gets sick with spyware and you have to re-install? What if you just want to change your configuration – or if are weary of rebooting and would like to simply access Windows files from Linux? In this month’s Linux Windows Integration cover story, we’ll describe how dual boot really works and show you how to configure your own dual boot system.
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| Related Articles | |
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| BOOT POLISHING | Putting Linux and Windows on a single hard disk |
| BOTTLE OPENER | Setting Up Windows software on Linux with WineTools |
| ON THE DISK | Accessing NTFS partitions in Linux |
| PRACTICAL WINE | Running Windows Programs with the Wine API |
| PC IN A BOX | The PC Emulator VMware Workstation 4.5.2 for Linux |
| WATER OR WINE? | Wine, Crossover Office, and Cedega |
| ApacheCon US video archive |
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All about Apache in 19 talks Watch 19 talks from the ApacheCon US in New Orleans from the convenience of your home or office. Topics are: Scaling Apache 2.x in all dimensions, Securing Communications with your Apache HTTP Server, Scripting your Java Application with BSF 3.0 and much more. |
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